Science Friday - Inside the lives of astronauts’ families

Episode Date: April 14, 2026

“This was not easy, being 200,000+ miles away from home. Like before you launch, it feels like it's the greatest dream on earth. And when you're out there, you just wanna get back to your families a...nd your friends.” – Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman Last week, the crew of Artemis II made it safely home. Throughout the journey, we heard the astronauts talk about moonjoy, awe, wonder, and—without exception—gratitude for their families.  To learn more about what it's like to be part of an astronaut family, Host Flora Lichtman chats with Tracy Scott, whose dad was a commander during the Apollo missions. Now, as a sociologist who studies the Moonshot era, Scott gives us a glimpse into astronaut life and the social context of the Apollo and Artemis missions. Guest:  Dr. Tracy Scott is a sociologist at Emory University studying the lives and families of Apollo era astronauts. She’s based in Atlanta, Georgia. Transcripts for each episode are available within 1-3 days at sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:02 Hey, it's Flora Lichten, and you're listening to Science Friday. Last Friday, some red and white-striped parachutes opened, and four Earthlings returned safely home. A perfect bullseye splashdown for integrity in its four astronauts. Reed Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Cook, and Jeremy Hansen back on Earth after a journey around the moon. Throughout the journey, we heard the Artemis II astronauts talk about moon joy, awe, wonder. And without exception, we heard them talk about their families. Here's Artemis II Commander Reid Wiseman in remarks after the mission. No one knows what the families went through, man.
Starting point is 00:00:43 This was not easy. Being 200,000-plus miles away from home, like before you launch, it feels like it's the greatest dream on Earth. And when you're out there, you just want to get back to your families and your friends. It's a special thing to be a human and it's a special thing to be on planet Earth. My next guest knows what it's like to be on the other side. Dr. Tracy Scott is the child of Apollo commander David R. Scott, who went to space three times and was the seventh person to walk on the moon. Now Tracy is a sociologist at Emory University who studies the lives and families of moonshot era astronauts. And she's here to give us a glimpse into astronaut life from the perspective of the family members who orbit them.
Starting point is 00:01:26 and to weigh in on how this moonshot era compares to the first. Tracy, thank you for being here. Thank you so much for having me, Flora. Tracy, what has it been like for you to watch this mission? Is it like just deja vu? In some ways it is. In many ways it's not because it was so different back in the era that I grew up in. When my dad went into space, there was no communication at all.
Starting point is 00:01:54 We could hear them, but we could not talk with them. So it was a completely different landscape in terms of communication. So when our dads went into space, what they did for the families was they put this little communication box called the squawk box in our home that had a feed from mission control pretty much 24-7, although mission control would turn it off at night and they would turn it off if there was anything that they wanted to. to talk about technically. But we could hear that in the background during the whole mission, which was, I mean, it was just sort of like background noise. So you heard it, but you're just like, oh, yeah, that's the squawk box. And you sort of, as a kid, you didn't really pay attention to it because we had more fun things to do, like go outside and play with our friends. I mean, when your dad became an astronaut, you were three, and when he started, I mean, being an astronaut was a completely new job, right?
Starting point is 00:02:51 Like, it had been science fiction before. Absolutely, Flora. That's a great way to think about it. So my dad was selected into the third group of astronauts in 1963. So this was a really new occupation. All of the astronauts in the first three groups had been either test pilots or fighter pilots in the military. And this is what they grew up wanting to do, be a really great pilot, a test pilot. There was no such thing as an astronaut, and they never thought about it.
Starting point is 00:03:21 So this is new, and they go into this occupation. and I moved to the area around the Johnson Space Center in Houston that was developed for the NASA Space Center at the time. No one had lived in this area before, so there were these new housing developments. We all moved there together, and that was life. So as a three-year-old, my dad was an astronaut as soon as I could remember,
Starting point is 00:03:50 and I never thought anything about it. all my best friends' dads were astronauts. And everybody that lived in the neighborhood worked at NASA or they knew we were astronauts. They didn't make a big deal about it. And I just thought it was ordinary. I mean, I'm sure at the time it felt, you know, is what you knew. But in retrospect, was there a culture to your community, like, you know, special quirks or superstitions or rules that you grew up with that felt particular to being in an astronaut community? You know, that's an interesting question, Flora. I'm not sure that I would characterize it like that.
Starting point is 00:04:30 I think that for many people, the daily life would seem ordinary. But one of the wives I interviewed had a great way of saying it. She said, we lived in a bubble, meaning that the whole area and the community and everybody there was focused on this goal of getting a man on the moon by the end of the decade. which is JFK's words. So there was a focus and a real communal aspect to life. And in some ways that became so ordinary, especially for kids. You know, at the same time, I think we knew it was extraordinary because the media presence was there.
Starting point is 00:05:11 So every time one of the men went on a mission, you had the photographers and the media camped out in the front lawn of your house. So we knew that was kind of different. but it was just like, okay, it's my turn. You know, in two months, it'll be Diane Gordon's turn for this. And so it was this extraordinary thing that was ordinary, right? It was just a weird time. Was everyone in your circle like a super overachiever?
Starting point is 00:05:38 No, I don't know. You know, that's a good question. I don't know. I don't know that it translated down like that. You mean to the kids or to? Yeah, just like, yeah, was everyone sort of like, when I think of astronauts, they're so capable, right? Like they're MacGyvers and they have PhDs and they can fly planes and they can also fix a toilet, you know. But see, it wasn't like that then, Flora.
Starting point is 00:06:00 These guys were pilots first. And they did have to learn a lot of science. And in fact, they had to know a lot more in terms of flying the spacecraft than anyone now because there weren't computers like there are now. But I don't think, you know, again, when it's your dad, you don't think of them that way. and I knew they worked hard. We all did. They were gone all during the week. They were only home on the weekends.
Starting point is 00:06:26 So in some ways, I think a lot of the kids thought, well, they weren't thinking, oh, my dad's an overachiever. They were thinking, my dad's gone a lot, and I don't get to see them very much, right? It's really more a story about how children develop and about families and about how we all have a family context that shapes us. That's what I want to talk about. I mean, were families involved with the space program? Like, is it like the presidency where, you know, spouses and kids have a job? That is a great way to say it, Flora. I'm not sure we kids had a job, but our moms did.
Starting point is 00:07:03 And it was so much more than people realized the wives had to go make speeches to different places around Houston. They would make trips to the contractors. After the missions, they went on state diplomatic trips to foreign countries. They had a whole staff and an itinerary. I teach a class now about this. And this student said, geez, they're more like first ladies. Yeah, that's what it sounds like. Yeah, they were then.
Starting point is 00:07:29 It was a lot of work. And one of my other students said, well, did they get paid? I said, no. And she said, well, could they say no? And I said, no. You know, it was, again, it's a different era. None of them had any idea they would be doing this. They didn't have any training, but they did it, and they did it really well.
Starting point is 00:07:51 And they held the families together during the week. They were incredible women. You've done oral histories with the spouses of some of these Apollo astronauts. I mean, how do they see themselves in terms of this era? Do they feel like they were, you know, do they feel like they were integral and are under-recognized? Like, what's their perspective on their own role? I don't think they see it quite like that. I see it more that way. I think they do recognize they did a lot of work. In fact, Barbara Sernan has a great quote. She was Jean Sernan's wife. He was Apollo 17 commander. And the quote that I've heard her say is, if you think going to the moon is hard, try staying home. I thought, yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:41 They, they, it was a lot of work, and it was a lot of strain on the marriages, and they recognized that. And in fact, the divorce rate was extremely high, probably 80% or more. So it took a toll, and they absolutely saw that it took a toll. Yet at the same time, they felt like they were contributing to something bigger than themselves. And when I do the oral history interviews, when I asked them at the end, so, okay, tell me overall what was that time like? One of the wives summed it up very succinctly, and she said it was the most exciting time of my life because we were going to the moon. We. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:30 And I thought that's exactly captures what it was like, right? Even though she got divorced and had lots of heartache and all sorts of other stuff happening, she still looks back on that time as incredibly exciting and important and communal, right? I love getting a window into this world. We have to take a break, but coming up, a look at today's Artemis II mission and what's changed for astronauts and their families in the last 50 years. We'll be right back. Tracy, what's your relationship to launches?
Starting point is 00:10:16 Oh, that's an interesting question. You mean current day or since my dad was? I think I mean both. Okay, so let me tell you a story then about my dad's Apollo 15 launch. So we, as a family, went down to Cape Canaveral to watch the launch along with the Irwin family. And Jill Irwin, the daughter of Jim Irwin, she and I were the same age. And we went to the viewing area where families got to view the launch that was private area. And we drove out there in cars, and I can remember, she and I were sitting in the backseat of this station wagon reading our books.
Starting point is 00:10:54 And I can remember one of our moms came and said, okay, you have to get out of the car now to come watch the launch. And it was spectacular. But it was, again, it was this thing that was like, okay, we're going to watch another one of these. It is spectacular and it's sort of overwhelming and hard to describe. Yet until it got to that point, we were going to sit there and read our books. because that was really interesting. And it wasn't scary. No.
Starting point is 00:11:21 I remember when I was probably before Apollo 15, when there was a reporter that asked me, are you afraid? And I said, of what? As a child growing up, what your dad does is ordinary. And you don't think about it as scary. You know, my dad had been a test pilot,
Starting point is 00:11:39 which was far more dangerous than being an astronaut. Now, again, there were, we had friends whose dad had died. And I know we knew about that, but those of us that were younger, I don't think we really took it in. And I think our moms protected us. You said that Artemis II is not exactly deja vu because there are so many differences. Yeah. What's different from a sociological perspective?
Starting point is 00:12:03 So much is different. NASA was only five years old when my dad was selected into the astronaut program. That is wild. It's wild. It was what I tell my students, it was like a startup. It was much less bureaucratic. It was much more flexible. Everybody knew each other. The astronauts had input into how the spacecraft was being designed. They all talked together when they were in the office.
Starting point is 00:12:30 It was informal communication way different than it is now. There weren't nearly as many of the rules and regulations. They weren't as strictly enforced. So I think there was this level of informality and camaraderie that, that bound people together more closely in that small group culture. Well, I wanted to ask you about a cultural thing that I have noticed. I have noticed in these messages back to Earth, and, you know, I'm a super consumer. So I'll just, that's an aside.
Starting point is 00:13:03 But the astronauts are not shying away from the L word. Here's pilot Victor Glover. Houston copies. We'll see you on the other side. He's talking to us on Earth, like we are all his family and that he's our family. I guess I wonder what you make of that. What I think that shows is this the bigger kind of perspective shift that happened a lot, that has happened a lot with many of the astronauts. When you go into space and you go further than low Earth orbit where you can actually see,
Starting point is 00:13:57 the earth in the vastness of deep space, it shifted a lot of the men's perspectives at the beginning in a way that they didn't anticipate. And one of the best accounts of this came from Rusty Schweigart. He was with my dad on Apollo 9. And what he talks about is you see, again, in this vastness of space, it's all black except for the white of the stars, the gray of the moon. And the only color you see is this little blue earth, little blue marble. And you think, oh, my gosh, that's where all my people are, right? And yes, my family, but everybody else is like family. Everyone's in this together. And what are we doing? What are we doing, right? Yeah. So it's this really interesting perspective. I love that because we heard something so similar from mission specialist Christina Cook.
Starting point is 00:14:54 I found myself noticing not only the beauty of the Earth. You know, hearing you say this, you know, I assumed that this is sort of like NASA boilerplate. But it sounds like what you're saying is that that message actually came out of a genuine perspective shift that came with leaving the planet. Yes, this has been out there for a long time. There was a great quote by Norman Cousins, who was an editor of the Saturday Review, where he, said, what is most significant about the lunar voyage is not that man set foot on the moon, but that he set eye on Earth. And that, to me, epitomizes all of this, and we've had that perspective since Apollo, but we've forgotten it. So I'm glad she said that, but it's a reminder
Starting point is 00:16:07 that we've had this perspective, and we've lost it. I was thinking about, like, what's the essence of these moon missions. And it's not about exploring. It's about humans exploring. Yeah. Yes. Absolutely. And I was thinking, like, in relation to your work, that if we really want to understand the meaning of this type of exploration, we also have to consider people's, you know, human experience at home and, like, what it means to leave your family behind. Absolutely. That And again, the fact that we're not in this alone, and nobody does anything alone or accomplishes anything alone. We're in it together. There was a great interview with, I think it was a former astronaut, Peggy Whitson.
Starting point is 00:17:03 She was in the International Space Station, actually, for a very long time. And they asked her during the Artemis launch, so what were you feeling when you were sitting there and it's getting close to the countdown? and what are you feeling, you know, what were your emotions about yourself, basically? And she said, I wasn't thinking about me. I was thinking about the hundreds of thousands of workers who got me there and how I was doing this for them, for the team, for the group. You know, this is, again, as a sociologist, we have to look at how we relate to other people and how you come together and accomplish a lot more together than alone. That's the other big shift I think. that has happened since the Apollo era is we've become much more individualistic, much more
Starting point is 00:17:50 focus on ourselves and what's going to make us happy and what's going to make us fulfilled and what can we accomplish as an individual in a way that's detrimental to a lot of life that's detrimental to community. It's really taken the focus off of trying to help each other. And that's, it's difficult today, but maybe some of these amazing photos and the words from the Artemis astronauts can bring us back around to trying to have that perspective that thinks about something greater than ourselves. Dr. Tracy Scott is a sociologist at Emory University in Atlanta. Tracy, thank you so much for joining me today. Thank you so much for having me, Flora. I really enjoyed it. This episode was produced by Rasha Airedi.
Starting point is 00:18:40 Special thanks to Jason Isaac and our colleagues at WNYC for making this sound so good. We will catch you next time. I'm Flora Lichmann.

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